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Tanzania Edible Oils Demand Analysis:

The Effects of Income and Substitutes

Michael Olabisi, Ph.D. ASPIRES (MSU)

How do we stimulate the domestic edible oil sector?

Can tariffs be effective?

Can taxes (or tax waivers) be effective?

Our Main Question

The Economic Question Price Sensitivity (Elasticity) Substitution (Cross-Price Elasticity)

Tanzania Demand Household survey data

Findings

Outline

Buyer's price-sensitivity dictate how price-based policies work

Own-price elasticity of demand If prices change, how much will demand change?

Cross-price elasticity of demand If prices for other items change, how will demand change?

Income elasticity of demand If income changes, how much will demand change?

The Economics of Policy Options

Demand is high and growing

Palm oil has the largest market share>95% of palm oil used is imported

Sunflower oil is the leading domestic alternative

Tanzania Demand

Uses of Palm Oil

Detailed national survey at the household level

Daily records of spending in more than 200 narrowly defined product categories (coicop codes)

More than 80,000 edible oil purchase records.

8,900+ households with spending on edible oils.\newline

21 regions, 117 districts and 187 wards: rural and urban

Tanzania Demand: Household Level Data

Household Level Data: Coverage

We use the Quadratic Almost Ideal Demand-System (QUAIDS) approach to estimate:

consumer's price-sensitivity for edible oils

cross-price sensitivity between palm and sunflower oil

income-sensitivity of edible oil demand

Analytical Approach

Edible Oil Buying Patterns

Urban vs. Rural By IncomeUrban vs. Rural By Income

Palm sold in 99.5% of clusters.Sunflower in 62%May have distribution challenges

Main Findings

Simulation:18% VAT Waiver for Sunflower Oil

Simulation: 10% Price Increase for Palm Oil

Discussion and Conclusions Tariff/Rebate price changes unlikely to stimulate demand

Urbanization and income play a large part in demand patterns

Price patterns suggest consumer preferences for quality

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